Gregory A. Thompson v. Dane County Land Conservation Committee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 2, 2023
Docket2021AP001862
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gregory A. Thompson v. Dane County Land Conservation Committee (Gregory A. Thompson v. Dane County Land Conservation Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory A. Thompson v. Dane County Land Conservation Committee, (Wis. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. February 2, 2023 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2021AP1862 Cir. Ct. No. 2021CV1021

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

GREGORY A. THOMPSON,

PETITIONER-APPELLANT,

V.

DANE COUNTY LAND CONSERVATION COMMITTEE AND DANE COUNTY,

RESPONDENTS-RESPONDENTS.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Dane County: VALERIE BAILEY-RIHN, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded with directions.

Before Blanchard, P.J., Graham, and Nashold, JJ.

Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent

or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3). No. 2021AP1862

¶1 PER CURIAM. Gregory Thompson appeals a circuit court order remanding this matter to the Dane County Land Conservation Committee (“the LCC”) for the LCC to explain its reasoning with respect to one of the issues that Thompson raised before the LCC, and to consider and decide an issue that Thompson raised before the LCC but that the LCC did not consider. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Thompson owns property (“the property”) near the intersection of Burke and Reiner Roads in the Town of Burke, in Dane County. The property is located in a “shoreland” zone.1

¶3 In March 2020, Thompson hired a company to remove trees, through a mulching process, that were growing on the property. Shortly after Thompson completed this project, Jess Starks, an erosion control specialist with the Dane County Land and Water Resources Department (“the Department”), conducted an inspection of the property and determined that Thompson’s project had resulted in “land disturbing activity.”2

1 “Shoreland” is defined in pertinent part as: “[a]ll lands within … 300 feet of the ordinary highwater mark of any navigable river or stream ….” DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 11.015(37)(a)2. (2017). It is not disputed that the property was in a shoreland zone.

Chapter 11 of the Dane County Ordinances was last revised on January 31, 2017. All references to chapter 11 are to the 2017 version. 2 “Land disturbing activity” is defined in the Dane County Ordinances as:

[a]ny alteration or disturbance that may result in soil erosion, sedimentation, or change in runoff[,] including, but not limited to, removal of ground cover, grading, excavating, or filling of land. Tillage of existing agricultural fields is not considered a land disturbing activity, provided it is done in conformance with a site-

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¶4 As a result, Starks emailed Thompson, attaching a Notice of Violation (“the Notice”) and a Stop Work Order. The Notice stated that Thompson had “created land disturbance by grading within 300 feet of a navigable stream” without a shoreland erosion control permit, in violation of DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 11.05(3)(a)1. The Notice directed Thompson to submit, by a specified date, an after-the-fact shoreland erosion control permit application and related materials, including an erosion control plan stamped by a professional engineer, and to submit “double fees” for his failure to obtain the permit prior to beginning work on the project. See DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCES §§ 11.05(3)(a), (4)(c)14.; 11.50(7).3

¶5 Thompson responded to Starks the same day, stating that he did not grade the property and that “[a]ll [he] did was get rid of the trees.” He explained that the company he had hired used a machine that “chips” the trees in place, leaving an area of the property that was “full of mulch.” Thompson conceded that there may be “some machine tracks that may have roughed up the soil[,]” particularly where the ground was wet, and that he could “throw some seed” on those areas. Starks replied, stating that Thompson’s activity triggers the permit requirement.

specific farm conservation plan approved by the Director [of the Department].

DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE 11.015(19). 3 The Notice also informed Thompson that he was required to submit an after-the-fact stormwater management permit application pursuant to Chapter 14 of the Dane County Ordinances. Thompson was also ultimately cited for a violation of DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 14.45(1) (2019), which requires obtaining an erosion control permit for “[l]and disturbing activity in excess of 4,000 square feet.” (This provision was revised and renumbered to DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 14.06(1) (2021) after issuance of the Department’s citation; however, the pertinent language has not changed.) Because neither the circuit court nor the parties on appeal discuss the Chapter 14 violation, we likewise do not address it.

3 No. 2021AP1862

When Thompson inquired about the legal basis for a permit, Starks cited the applicable ordinances and provided the following explanation:

Basically, any activity that creates bare soil (including incidental due to tires) in the shoreland zone qualifies for a permit. Even one square foot. This entire lot is within the shoreland zone, so any disturbance, whether accidental or not, requires a permit. This includes grubbing stumps or pulling trees.

¶6 Thompson then sent photographs to Starks and requested that she meet him at the property for a site visit. He stated that he had visited the property and found “that there is no bare ground and that as expected the trees were simply mulched” and that the “entire site is covered with 2-3 inches of mulch.” In response, Starks stated that the Department was not “meeting with folks on site at this time” and that she and a supervisor, Jeremy Balousek, had reviewed the photos and concluded that “there is undeniably disturbed soil on this site, [which] creates the need for an after-the-fact shoreland erosion control permit.” She stated that “there is no grey area” and reiterated the Department’s position that Thompson needed to file a permit application by the previously stated deadline.

¶7 A few days later, Thompson submitted a “simplified” erosion control permit application and checklist pursuant to DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 11.05(2)(b). Under this provision, the Department may “waive requirements for an engineer’s stamp and allow for the use of a simplified erosion control checklist” if, among other criteria, the “[t]otal area of soil disturbance will not exceed 1,000 square feet.” Sec. 11.05(2)(b)5. Starks informed Thompson that the simplified permit application was insufficient and required him to submit the application required in the Notice. Thompson did not submit the requested application and was issued a citation for a violation of § 11.05(3)(a). On May 22, 2020, Thompson filed

4 No. 2021AP1862

an appeal with the LCC pursuant to DANE COUNTY, WIS., ORDINANCE § 11.99(4)(a).

¶8 The LCC held a hearing on Thompson’s appeal (“the evidentiary hearing”). Starks did not testify at the evidentiary hearing and the record does not indicate that her inspection report was submitted as evidence. Balousek testified, stating that he believed it was the tire tracks left in the soil from the machinery used for Thompson’s project—and not the tree mulching itself—that was deemed land- disturbing activity. The LCC issued a decision upholding the Department’s determination that Thompson’s project constituted land-disturbing activity that required the shoreland erosion control permit requested by the Department.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Gregory A. Thompson v. Dane County Land Conservation Committee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-a-thompson-v-dane-county-land-conservation-committee-wisctapp-2023.